Best of
Queer-Lit

1988

Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir


Paul Monette - 1988
    A National Book Critics Circle Award finalist and the winner of the PEN Center West literary award.

Love Alone: Eighteen Elegies for Rog


Paul Monette - 1988
    An eighteen-poem cycle on the death of his lover from AIDS emphasizes the power of love and its survival through pain and anger, and the tragedy and magnitude of a terrifying twist of fate and its effect on a generation.

The Quilt: Stories from the Names Project


Cindy Ruskin - 1988
    Panels containing individuals' names from across the nation and five foreign countries are sewn together creating one quilt measuring 150 feet by 470 feet, weighing over three tons. This symbolic book contains color photos of the panels and the stories behind them. The actual quilt is presently on a national tour to the 25 largest U.S. cities. The Quilt will go to The NAMES Project.

Macho Sluts: Erotic Fiction


Patrick Califia-Rice - 1988
    Nobody had ever written so frankly about the kinky potential of woman-to-woman sex (and nobody has ever done it any better). If any book is responsible for the formation of the modern lesbian leather community, this one is it.Despite its graceful language, imaginative scenarios, and abundant humor, the lesbian press trashed Macho Sluts, and it became a focal point for the infamous legal battles between Canada Customs and Little Sister's, the gay and lesbian bookstore. But readers loved it, and to this day Macho Sluts remains a vital and moving classic that still has the power to educate, radicalize, and expand our notions of the body's potential to provide us with pleasure, pain, and love.This new edition, part of Arsenal Pulp Press' Little Sister's Classics series resurrecting classics of LGBT literature, includes a new afterword by the author, and an introduction by Wendy Chapkis, a professor of sociology and women and gender studies at the University of Southern Maine in Portland.Patrick Califia has written many books about radical sex, queer communities, and the repression of desire. Almost ten years ago, Califia transitioned from female to male; he now lives as a bisexual transman in San Francisco.